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Gregory T Angelo, President of the New Tolerance Campaign joined Clint on the Ray Appleton show to talk about the launch of NTC's Hate Map project. August 28th 2024 --- Please Like, Comment and Follow 'The Ray Appleton Show' on all platforms: --- 'The Ray Appleton Show' is available on the KMJNOW app, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube or wherever else you listen to podcasts. --- 'The Ray Appleton Show' Weekdays 11 AM -2 PM Pacific on News/Talk 580 AM & 105.9 KMJ | Website | Facebook | Podcast | - Everything KMJ KMJNOW App | Podcasts | Facebook | X | InstagramSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
On this episode of “The Federalist Radio Hour,” New Tolerance Campaign President Gregory Angelo joins Federalist Senior Elections Correspondent Matt Kittle to discuss the Southern Poverty Law Center’s history of tarnishing faith-based and conservative organizations and explain the importance of tracking the alarming rise of leftist violence and extremist ideology infiltrating key American institutions. You […]
While judging people based upon their membership in some greater group is not in and of itself wrong, it is often not appropriate. In the end, one must build merit for oneself, and one must be judged upon those merits. Merits and shortcomings alike are earned individually and thus cannot be transferred to others. Individuals are to be judged for individual deeds and be awarded or punished accordingly, and groups, likewise, should be awarded or punished for deeds committed by the entire group. Doing anything else results in injustice. The SPLC is at it again. The Southern Poverty Law Center has expanded it "hate map" by expanding and distorting the definition of hate to suit the left wing. SPLC expands 'Hate Map' by adding political and parents groups to hate extremists | Just The News --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jp-mac/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jp-mac/support
Floyd Corkins confessed to the FBI that he intended to commit mass murder and was motivated by the so-called “Hate Map.” Constitutional expert, lawyer, author, pastor, and founder of Liberty Counsel Mat Staver discusses the important topics of the day with co-hosts and guests that impact life, liberty, and family. To stay informed and get involved, visit LC.org
Quarterback Tom Brady announced his retirement from the NFL after 22 seasons. Was there any fan base more excited to see him leave than Atlanta Falcons fans? A new Twitter study shows just how real the ‘Tom Brady Hate' is.
Americans were shocked by the violent insurrection carried out by a pro-Trump mob at the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021. President Trump had spent months goading his supporters to rally behind him and dog whistling to white supremacist groups to rise up, and they heeded his calls. Susan Corke is not surprised by the rising tide of hate that exploded into public view at the Capitol. She is director of the Intelligence Project at the Southern Poverty Law Center, which tracks and exposes hate groups and other domestic extremists. The Center's annual Hate Map currently shows that there are 838 hate groups active in the U.S. In the most recent official assessment, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security named 2019 as “the most lethal year for domestic violent extremism in the United States since the Oklahoma City bombing in 1995.” The SPLC also explores who becomes radicalized in a podcast, Sounds Like Hate, which just launched its second season. In 2020, the podcast examined racism in Randolph, Vermont. “2020 was a perfect storm," Corke says. "You had the coronavirus, and people were spending more time online and people were radicalizing online…What you have now in 2021 is the people that stormed the Capitol, as well as the majority of the Republican Party, are still not disavowing what happened on January 6. "So we're at a very dangerous and divided place in our country. These hate groups and those that have been radicalized are still very mobilized.”
Hate is on the rise. Last week, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security issued a rare National Terrorism Advisory System Bulletin warning of the threat from home-grown extremists, anti-government militias, far-right hate groups and white supremacists. This week, the Southern Poverty Law Center released its annual report, The Year in Hate and Extremism 2020. The report documents the existence of 838 hate groups around the country, including 30 hate groups in New England. It includes a Hate Map, which shows the location of all the groups. SPLC says the number of hate groups are “a barometer of extremism in the country.” “The insurrection at the Capitol was the culmination of years of right-wing radicalization,” said Susan Corke, director of the SPLC's Intelligence Project. “Most recently, it was the product of Donald Trump's support for and encouragement of radicalized individuals and groups to buy into conspiracy theories about a ‘stolen election.'” Cassie Miller, Senior Research Analyst with SPLC, discusses the state of hate from around the US to New England. “My biggest worry is what we're seeing right now is the growth of a mass social movement that is anti-democratic,” she tells The Vermont Conversation. “It's not going to go away just because we have a new president.”
This is the very first episode of Questioning Everything (QE). It's light on content because this show is designed to be a conversation between everyday folks. Do you ever get annoyed by the fact that much of what we discuss everyday is dictated by mainstream media, political pundits, and “influencers”/celebrities? If so, this podcast is OUR chance to talk about anything and everything in an honest, open and inclusive environment. QE is a nonpartisan podcast, though our host, Go Zee, does discuss her own personal beliefs. The goal of this podcast is to engage communities through the greater Washington DC area around issues that impact them and deserve to be addressed. But it won't always be so serious. Humor will always be a big part of the Questioning Everything Podcast. Additionally, the episodes are designed for adult audiences so there may future episodes that include expletives and candid conversations around adult themes such as sex, assault, and criminal cases. Though the show will be an honest opportunity to hear from different points of views and engage in rewarding information exchanges, there are general guidelines for participating in the show, commenting, and communicating with the show, its host(s) and guests. Those general guidelines will be shared later this week.Thanks for tuning into Questioning Everything. New episodes will be uploaded every Thirsty Thursday at 8:00pm. Sign up here (scroll to the very bottom of the webpage) to receive reminders about when new episodes or updates are available. As noted in the episode, you can find QE's host, Go Zee, on Instagram - @GototheZee and Twitter - @GototheZee. Follow Questioning Everything on Instagram (@q_e_podcast), Twitter (@q_e_podcast) and Facebook (/QuestioningEverythingPodcast). Lastly, please find the This American Life episode regarding voter fraud to see just how common or uncommon it actually is. Share your feedback in the comments or send us an email at q.e.podcast2020@gmail.com.Cheers!-QELINKS OR ORGANIZATIONS MENTIONED IN THE EPISODE: CBS News: https://www.cbsnews.com/live-updates/2020-election-most-secure-history-dhs/Operation Understanding DC: www.oudc.orgSouthern Poverty Law Center's Hate Map: https://www.splcenter.org/hate-mapThis American Life Excerpt: https://www.thisamericanlife.org/630/things-i-mean-to-know/act-one-0US Navy Summer Seminar: https://www.usna.edu/Admissions/Programs/NASS.php
On this episode of Soft Power Radio, we are in conversation with Samantha Kutner, a subject matter expert on the Proud Boys and a research fellow at the Khalifa Ihler Institute. Check out and contribute to the institute's Hate Map, an innovative tool for recording and mapping far-right extremism around the world: https://www.khalifaihler.org/hate-map. As incidents of right-wing violence become more commonplace and extremist, conspiratorial ideologies move from the fringes to the mainstream, Kutner's work - to demystify and understand groups like the Proud Boys - becomes crucial material for study. Check out her articles and projects at proudboyswhisperer.com
Senior Editor of PJ Media, Tyler O'Neil is an author and conservative commentator. He has written for numerous publications, including Christian Post, National Review, the Washington Free Beacon, the Daily Signal, and the Colson Center's Breakpoint. He has appeared on Fox News' Tucker Carlson Tonight. He is the author of Making Hate Pay: The Corruption of the Southern Poverty Law Center. He enjoys Indian food, board games, and talking ceaselessly about politics, religion, and culture. Readings & Resources Making Hate Pay: The Corruption of the Southern Poverty Law Center on Amazon related reading: Tyler reports on the SPLC "The SPLC's Fall From Grace: How a Civil Rights Group Became a Threat to Free Speech" "SPLC Demands Big Tech Silence Conservatives in the Name of Fighting White Supremacist Terror" "SPLC Releases Fear-Mongering 'Hate Map' Amid Coronavirus Outbreak" Tyler's writings at PJ Media Ruth Institute's dust-up with SPLC: Where's the Hate? PJ Media reports: "Another Scalp? Donation Processing Company Drops ‘Hate Group’ Christian Nonprofit Attacked by the Southern Poverty Law Center" Tyler's review of The Sexual State: "The Sexual State: How Government and Big Donors Gave Us the Sexual Revolution" Action Items Follow Tyler O'Neil on Twitter: @Tyler2ONeil Tweet about the SPLC’s corruption using the hashtag #MakingHatePay Whenever you hear or read about the SPLC or its "Hate Map," write the editor, speak out, correct the record! Write to your congressmen, big tech, and corporate america, encouraging them to stop trusting the SPLC
Willem, Bryan and Frank discuss ALL THE HOT TOPICS this week. The gang covers everything from the SPLC Hate Map to Bryan getting scammed on Instagram. Be sure to rate, review and subscribe to never miss an episode. Slainte!
Heidi Beirich tracks hate groups for the Southern Poverty Law Center. She is an expert on various forms of extremism, including the white supremacist, nativist and neo-Confederate movements. In this episode of Roughly Speaking, Beirich talks about hate groups in Maryland, but more generally about how she works, and how the SPLC goes about declaring American organizations to be hate groups. Beirich oversees the SPLC’s annual survey of the nation’s hate and anti-government groups, available on the center's interactive Hate Map, which lists 917 such groups across the country and 18 in Maryland.Links:https://www.splcenter.org/hate-map?gclid=Cj0KCQjw9afOBRDWARIsAJW4nvyf1Nyhh6ZPUwFwhXZz1rzEeL3HVONCLrGGwKsegNteMV0LPZFiGMwaAi6jEALw_wcB
The Southern Poverty Law Center ☠ A Hate Group ☠ The "Anti-Hate" Group That Is a Hate Group Shutting down people you don’t agree with is about as un-American as you can get. Rigorous debate, honest discussion, open exchange of ideas—that’s the American way. But free thinking and speech are threatened today by a group with a sweet-sounding name that conceals a nefarious purpose. This group is called the Southern Poverty Law Center, or SPLC. Originally founded as a civil-rights law firm in 1971, the SPLC reinvented itself in the mid-‘80s as a political attack group. Every year now it produces a new list of people and charities it claims are “extremists” and “haters.” Aided by glowing coverage from the establishment media, the SPLC’s hate list has become a weapon for taking individuals and groups they disagree with and tarring them with ugly associations. The SPLC employs a two-pronged strategy: First, find a handful of crazies with barely any followers, no address, and no staff, and blow them up into a dangerous movement— proof that there are neo-Nazis lurking everywhere. On their notorious “Hate Map,” the SPLC lists 917 separate hate groups in the U.S.! No one has even heard of more than a handful of them. The second strategy of the SPLC is to undermine legitimate political voices that they oppose by associating them with extremists like the KKK. Take the charity known as the Alliance Defending Freedom. The SPLC lists them as a “hate group.” Is that fair? Well, the ADF has a network of 3,000 attorneys from all across the U.S. who’ve donated more than a million volunteer hours in defense of religious liberty. They’ve had a role in 49 victories at the U.S. Supreme Court. Putting the Alliance Defending Freedom on a list with 130 Ku Klux Klan chapters is not only wrong, it’s malicious. According to the SPLC, one of the most influential social scientists in the U.S.— Charles Murray—is a, quote, “white nationalist.” Ayaan Hirsi Ali, perhaps the most eloquent spokesperson for the rights of Muslim women, is, to the SPLC, a “toxic... anti-Muslim extremist.” Scores of other individuals and charities active in mainstream conservative or religious causes have likewise been branded by the Southern Poverty Law Center as threats to society. Mind you, it is entirely fair to disagree with any of those folks. But it is utterly unfair to call them haters or extremists. The largest category listed by the SPLC as extremists—with 623 entries—covers groups like the Tea Party organizations that are wary of centralized government. Last time we checked, favoring smaller government was a mainstream and perfectly honorable American tradition. What is not honorable is the course prescribed by a leader of the SPLC, Mark Potok, who was caught on video proclaiming the organization’s true intentions. He told a group of supporters, quote, “the press will describe us as ‘monitoring hate groups’…. I want to say plainly that our aim in life is to destroy these groups, to completely destroy them.” Portraying someone with political views different from your own as a public menace is bullying. And it’s a dangerous game. Instead of reducing hate and violence, the SPLC’s name-calling directly incites it. In March 2017, Charles Murray was trying to discuss his acclaimed book Coming Apart at Middlebury College when he was violently attacked by protesters inflamed by the SPLC’s labeling of him as a racist. A professor escorting Murray ended up in the hospital. In 2012, a gunman attempted mass murder at the Family Research Council, and failed only because the first man he shot managed to disarm him. The attacker told the police he acted because the SPLC had listed the Family Research Council as a hate group. It’s a vicious irony: while promoting itself as a monitor of “hate groups,” the SPLC has, in practice, become a fomenter of hate. Yet the group rolls on, bigger than ever. What keeps them going? For one thing, the establishment media constantly quote them. Scare stories about right-wing storm-troopers are a sure way to attract eyeballs, and fit nicely with the media’s own preconceptions of the “dangerous reactionaries” lurking out there in middle America. Second, alarmism is a great fundraising technique. Convincing people there are fascists everywhere has turned the SPLC into a cash machine. Last year, the group hustled $50 million dollars out of frightened liberal donors, adding to the $368 million dollars of assets they were already sitting on. So, the next time you see the Southern Poverty Law Center quoted in the news, just remember: the masterminds behind the SPLC aren’t eliminating hate. They are fueling it. I’m Karl Zinsmeister for Prager University.
In Episode 12 of Series 2 of The Rights Track we talk radical right groups in the United States with Heidi Beirich, Intelligence Project Director for the Southern Poverty Law Center. 0.00-12.55 Heidi starts by explaining the work of the SPLC since its formation in the 1970s when it tried to make the Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Act “a reality” She mentions a civil suit the SPLC brought against the United Klans of America in the 80s which made the organisation realise the lack of information that existed about hate groups and how and where they operated. Heidi describes the sorts of groups that are listed including Neo-Nazis, Klansmen, anti-semitic and other racist/hate group. She provides a definition of a “hate group” and gives examples of the sorts of groups on SPLC's hate group list The SPLC publishes 2 lists - Active Hate Groups and Anti Government Groups Todd asks specifically about the Christian Identity movement and Heidi explains their ideology Some people in the US argue (especially online) that there is no difference between the Ku Klux Klan and Black Lives Matter - Heidi explains the difference Heidi mentions the SPLC's Hate Map and the hate crime data the organisation collects and how the two sets of data differ 12.55-17.20 The discussion moves on to the difference between free speech and hate speech in the US. Heidi explains the First Amendment Right, which protects the right to freedom of religion and freedom of expression from government interference. She explains how that plays out in reality in respect of hate speech within and, she argues, as a result of the Constitution Todd asks Heidi for her thoughts on the events in Charlottesville in August 2017 17.20- end How SPLA tracks and collects hate speech data on social media and how SPLC can use that data to track radical right movements and their activities Heidi mentions the group Stormfront.org and a recent conference it held. She goes on to talk about some of the positive developments by organisations such as Facebook post Charlottesville to take down hate speech material from its site. Where SPLC's support is coming from including the American Civil Liberties Union Heidi reflects on her concerns and hopes for the future. She says she is heartened by recent resolutions among politicians condemning white nationalists but concerned by what the transition towards a US where white people are no longer in the majority might signal in terms of hate groups and hate speech remaining at the fore.
(August 23, 2017) Dr J is once again Sheila Liaugminas' guest on Relevant Radio's A Closer Look. They're discussing the Southern Poverty Law Center's "hate map," which lists several religious and family-oriented organizations (including us) as "hate groups." They also discuss Ruth Institute's upcoming Healing Family Breakdown spiritual workshop.
8 AM - 1 - Lindsay said if Trump fires Sessions there will be "holy hell". 2 - The Hate Map. 3 - The News with Marshall Phillips. 4 - Long-Lost Historical Words You Absolutely Need In Your Life.
8 AM - 1 - Lindsay said if Trump fires Sessions there will be "holy hell". 2 - The Hate Map. 3 - The News with Marshall Phillips. 4 - Long-Lost Historical Words You Absolutely Need In Your Life.
8 AM - 1 - Lindsay said if Trump fires Sessions there will be "holy hell". 2 - The Hate Map. 3 - The News with Marshall Phillips. 4 - Long-Lost Historical Words You Absolutely Need In Your Life.
Thomas and Sam discuss Just War Theory, Karl Barth and where we go from here. Show Notes: Jewish cemetery vandalized in New York, third case in two weeks | Reuters Hate Map | SPLC Four Mosques Have Burned in Seven Weeks – Leaving Many Muslims and Advocates Stunned | BuzzFeed Pence used personal email for state business – and was hacked | USA Today W. Travis McMaken on Karl Barth | Academia.edu The post Thinking Religion 99: It’s Hard to Put the Cat Back In the Bag appeared first on Thinking.FM.
Eric Jon Phelps knows a lot of things. He knows that the Pope controls the world. He knows that it was the Jesuits who poisoned him in Tampa. And he knows that we can avoid the Vatican's plans to incite global race wars is to keep the races separate. Eric is the pastor of rural Pennsylvania's Reformation Bible Puritan Baptist Church.Content Note: Explicit content including bigotry, historical inaccuracies and language. The strange thing about Eric is that he's completely open he is about his views--and he doesn't shy from criticism. He's exceedingly knowledgeable about the Protestant Christianity which makes him a fantastic and outspoken preacher. However, the teachings of his church have landed him a spot on the Hate Map of America, which is where HBM Producer Emile B Klein found him.In this episode, Emile visits the church to investigate the story of Eric's rise and fall in the bizarre, radical, niche world of anti-papal internet talk radio and finds out how Eric's upbringing in the Civil Rights Era informed his views on white supremacy.Emile also speaks with Mark Potok, who is a Senior Fellow at the Southern Poverty Law Center, who thinks that Eric should be ostracized and shunned by society.This episode, more than any other in our archive, is morally troubling, for many reasons. One resource on that Emile recommends as supplementary reading for this episode is Jonathan Haidt's wonderful book, The Righteous Mind The Righteous Mind was essential for Emile's epiphany [spoiler alert] that hating hate is unproductive. Emile says:"All in all, I know that I am taking a pretty unlikable stand, but it's a stand I think is decent in the long run."This episode contains a 6 minute excerpt from a roundtable intervention between multiple First Ammendment Radio hosts. It has been highly edited for time. The original intervention lasted 2 hours and can be heard in its entirety right here. We tread on some pretty delicate subjects on this episode, please let us know how we're doing.Emile B Klein and Jeff Emtman co-produced this piece. Emile is a radio producer and a painter who’s been touring the country by bike for the last 4 years. He is the Director at You’re U.S., which is a non-profit that highlights the qualities that tie together modern Americans through arts and craftsmanship. This episode is Dedicated to Roy Silberstein, who always fought for the underdog.Music on the show fromThe Black Spot, Olecranon Rebellion, Serocell, Cloaking, Lucky Dragons
Eric Jon Phelps knows a lot of things. He knows that the Pope controls the world. He knows that it was the Jesuits who poisoned him in Tampa. And he knows that we can avoid the Vatican's plans to incite global race wars is to keep the races separate. Eric is the pastor of rural Pennsylvania's Reformation Bible Puritan Baptist Church.Content Note: Explicit content including bigotry, historical inaccuracies and language. The strange thing about Eric is that he's completely open he is about his views--and he doesn't shy from criticism. He's exceedingly knowledgeable about the Protestant Christianity which makes him a fantastic and outspoken preacher. However, the teachings of his church have landed him a spot on the Hate Map of America, which is where HBM Producer Emile B Klein found him.In this episode, Emile visits the church to investigate the story of Eric's rise and fall in the bizarre, radical, niche world of anti-papal internet talk radio and finds out how Eric's upbringing in the Civil Rights Era informed his views on white supremacy.Emile also speaks with Mark Potok, who is a Senior Fellow at the Southern Poverty Law Center, who thinks that Eric should be ostracized and shunned by society.This episode, more than any other in our archive, is morally troubling, for many reasons. One resource on that Emile recommends as supplementary reading for this episode is Jonathan Haidt's wonderful book, The Righteous Mind The Righteous Mind was essential for Emile's epiphany [spoiler alert] that hating hate is unproductive. Emile says:"All in all, I know that I am taking a pretty unlikable stand, but it's a stand I think is decent in the long run."This episode contains a 6 minute excerpt from a roundtable intervention between multiple First Ammendment Radio hosts. It has been highly edited for time. The original intervention lasted 2 hours and can be heard in its entirety right here. We tread on some pretty delicate subjects on this episode, please let us know how we're doing.Emile B Klein and Jeff Emtman co-produced this piece. Emile is a radio producer and a painter who's been touring the country by bike for the last 4 years. He is the Director at You're U.S., which is a non-profit that highlights the qualities that tie together modern Americans through arts and craftsmanship. This episode is Dedicated to Roy Silberstein, who always fought for the underdog.Music on the show fromThe Black Spot, Olecranon Rebellion, Serocell, Cloaking, Lucky Dragons